Trafigura
Captured by Mercaptan and Hydrogen Sulphide
While the
Gulf Jash, ex-Probo Koala, is leaving the oily waters
of the Gulf of Mexico and while the Aristos II, another tanker
chartered by Trafigura, is being scrapped on the muddy beaches of Chittagong
in Bangladesh, the judgement of the Amsterdam court course is showing
a new light on the dark side of traders and marine traffic.
The misinformation by the multinational Trafigura is denied. According
to their spokespeople, lawyers and their spin doctors everything which
happened in Abidijan is “a myth”. Amsterdam’s judgement
confirms that the waste from the Merox desulphurisation onboard the
Probo Koala was toxic and dangerous. Four years after the Probo
Koala’s stop in The Netherlands, this judgement puts an end
to the alleged irresponsibility of Trafigura. In spite of the breaking
up of responsibility in place in shipping, each link in the chain, on
land and at sea, has been grasped by the justice.
The suspended prison sentences inflicted on Naeem Ahmed, a former employer
of Trafigura, and on Sergueï Chertov, the former captain of the
Probo Koala, spare the directors of Trafigura, the Dutch official’s,
and Prime Marine Management, the Greek manager of the floating refinery.
The European justice has at this point shown itself to be as selective
concerning the events in The Netherlands as the Ivorian justice concerning
the events in Abidijan. Another similarity between the court case in
Abidijan and that in The Netherlands, is that the accused or witnesses
directly or indirectly employed by Trafigura were absent.
The French chief executive officer from the multinational Trafigura
could still be charged after a recent decision by the Netherlands High
Court.
However, it is a fact that these penal and financial sentences - Trafigura
has been indicted to a fine of 1 million euros or 1.28 million Dollars
- will strongly encourage, ship-owners, charterers, crews, port authorities
to more technical and regulatory severity in the management of ship’s
generated waste.
Through this sentence, the Amsterdam court is also attacking increasing
industrialisation on the high seas: waste produced onboard a vessel
after an industrial process - in this case refining - should be treated
in the same way as industrial waste produced on land, and not under
an exempt status of waste which derives from the normal operations of
a vessel.
The Dutch state has also a responsibility in the tragic event in Abidijan
as it did not implemented within its limits the European regulations
concerning the control of transboundary movements of hazardous wastes.
This responsibility could be declared by the Court of Justice of the
European Union if the complaint logged by both NGO’s Sherpa and
Robin des Bois in April 2010 is recognised.
A brief reminder of the facts
Under the orders of Trafigura, the Probo Koala proceeded with
the raw refinery of a Mexican petroleum fraction with a very high level
of sulphur component while the ship was posted off the coast of Gibraltar.
The method used was derived from a Merox process. This old process by-produces
two gases which cause nausea and are deadly in high doses: mercaptans
and hydrogen sulphide. Early July 2006, the Probo Koala sailed
to Amsterdam and Trafigura tried to get away with passing their desulphurisation
waste for normal waste, this is to say cargo residue. APS – Amsterdam
Port Services- realised the attempt of the scam while some of the waste
had already been unloaded. The estimated cost for treatment of the waste
went up from 23 to 900 euros per m3. Trafigura refused to pay and became
aggressive. The Dutch authorities and the APS gave in and authorised
to reload the waste on the Probo Koala. The vessel returns
to the sea with her toxic cargo, calls to another European port of Paldiski
in Estonia and heads for Africa. Finally, the waste is discharged in
Abidijan, Ivory Coast, where it spreads panic and it provokes according
to the official report the intoxication of 100,000 people and 16 dead.
See also
Trafigura
lies - Probo Koala and Trafigura's trial in Amsterdam. June
28, 2010
Probo
Koala, the book. May 2010
Toxic
wastes in Abidjan.
Wastes returning to Europe, Nov
7, 2006
Ivory
Coast Waste: Return to Sender,
September
29, 2006.
Notice
#4: Toxic wastes in the Ivory Coast and fires of repetition in France,
September
19, 2006
Notice
#3: French businessmen stuck in Abidjan’s toxic mixture,
September
14, 2006.
Call
for a waste charter, September 12, 2006.
Notice
#2: Ivory Coast Pollution, September 12, 2006
Notice
#1: Pollution in the Ivory Coast,
September
10, 2006
For the whole story (only available in French):
http://www.robindesbois.org/dossiers/probo_koala/page_probo_koala.html